While the crazy experimentation that we know and love from Can is present here, what makes this album different is that there is some noticeable strong structure that makes it easier for novice listener like myself to enjoy this album.

The album starts of great and ends well, but there is something missing in the middle. Really like the sound that Paul has on some of these tracks as it feels like a mix between Graceland and some of his earlier solo material.

A great mix of different genres ranging from Progressive Rock, Hard Rock, Glam Rock, Reggae, Country and of course Soft Rock. Elton John takes us on a musical journey were almost every song brings presents something new and fresh in comparison to other songs on the album.

Definitely Michael Jackson's Disco album and at times it seems like a forced mix between the great Stevie Wonder albums of 1970's and the pop music of the day. There are still some awesome tracks here such as Don't Stop Til You Get Enough, Rock With You and Off The Wall where you can tell that Michael has the potential to be a superstar. It would just take the next album to do that.

This album is very much a transition album for the Stones. Like The Beatles with A Hard Day's Night, this is their first album will all original compositions. There is some filler, but there are some iconic Stones tunes like "Paint It, Black," "Under My Thumb" and great underplayed closer "Goin' Home."

A triumphant collage of sounds is the best way to describe this album, which is indeed the best record of the first decade of the new millennium. With a mix of strings, piano, drums and catchy guitar rifts, Arcade Fire constructs a magnum opus in which they touch upon emotional highs and lows that life throws our way.

Of all of Bob Dylan's 1960's albums, this is his most blues inspired album and a lot of these songs are great blues tracks that could be put up there with many of the greats. Everyone knows that Dylan is a great songwriter, but I was struck by the great blending of different sounds and instrumentation on this album. Song of after song this best and most consistent harmonica playing I've ever heard, without going overboard. Blues Traveler should take note. The only downside with the album is its length which can somewhat hinder the enjoyably of listening to it.

If I was the producer for this album my advice to the band would have been "More Grace Slick!" Both of her premiere songs on the album (Somebody to Love and White Rabbit) are some of the best and most iconic songs of the late 1960's. Yet while some of the other songs on the albums are quite good, almost all of them could have used more Grace Slick.

A lot of great Simon and Garfunkel songs here. What I love about many of the tracks on this albums is they are great sing along songs, especially Cecelia and The Boxer. There are are a few filler songs on this album, but even those are pretty good.

You can here all of Tom Petty's musical influences in this record. From the birth of Rock 'n' Roll in the 1950's to the British Invasion and Folk Rock movement of the 1960's, its all present here. There are some weak spots, but this is Petty getting back to his roots and it doesn't get much better than that.

Great relaxing music with some of the best traditional rock guitar work you can find in the 1980's. Almost a greatest hits album due to how many classic songs that are on here. The only negative is that second half of the album, not including the title track, is weak in comparison to the first half of the album.

I have always associate this album with summer. I think it is because I always feel warmth when listening to the songs on this record. There is not a bad song on the album and most are classics. My only complaint is some of the songs blend together near the end of the album.

While a lot of the accolades deservedly go to Black Francis and Kim Deal, in each listen I am struck by the great work done by the drummer, David Lovering. This truly is a classic album with too many great songs to list here.

The best of Cash's American albums. You can hear the pain in his voice and his longing for his deceased wife June Carter. It's very haunting at points. Even though almost all of these songs are covers, he makes them his own.